In 2000 Martin McGuinness joined a long line of men reviled and
demonised by British politicians, by the disgusting British tabloid
press and media in general who took on ministerial office.

Jomo Kenyatta, a Mau Mau leader who put the fear of God into British
troops and planters in Kenya, jailed in 1953, prime minister of Kenya in
1963.

Robert Mugabe, jailed by the British and later President of Zimbabwe,
still a hate figure for the British who were stealing land there as late
as the 1940s.

Archbishop Makarios, exiled to the Seychelles in 1956, running Cyprus in
1974.

Yet all of these men and many others wanted to make a deal with the
British, in McGuinness’s case as part of an IRA delegation in talks in
1972 with the first proconsul in the north, Willie Whitelaw.

As far as the British public was concerned McGuinness, in the tradition
British politicians had adopted since the Easter Rising, was cast as
inhuman, some kind of crazed, deranged Anglophobe devoid of political
aims or ideals.

Nothing could be further from the truth, as became evident once
McGuinness emerged from the shadows.

Of course it’s true Martin McGuinness had deservedly earned a reputation
as a ruthless, steely-nerved IRA OC in Derry. A non-smoking virtual
tee-totaller, he could easily be portrayed as a fanatic.

Yet for those who knew him it was readily accepted that there was
another side to his character.

Did anyone imagine for a moment that McGuinness and those around him in
the IRA leadership wanted to continue living a life on the run for
decades? That he did not have political objectives both short and long
term that he pursued just as relentlessly as he organised IRA operations
throughout the north and England?

The qualities of patience and determination he displayed during
interminable talks with Brendan Duddy, the go-between in Derry for years
with MI6 and later the British, were equally in evidence in the past 10
years putting up with insults, provocation and arrogance from the DUP in
particular and unionists in general.

His earlier IRA career and reputation uniquely fitted him for his role
as chief conciliator with the British establishment.

His ‘good cop/bad cop’ partnership with Gerry Adams in the past 25 years
served republicans in good stead in their political development from a
‘Brits out’ movement to sharing power with unionists, a development
sadly not reciprocated.

It took the British 20 years from 1972 to accept the IRA wanted a
peaceful settlement. In the 18 years from 1998 no-one has done more than
McGuinness to convince unionists of his good faith and determination to
work with them in full partnership.

Unfortunately no-one emerged on the unionist side with anything
approaching the same stature, political ability and personal charm to
match McGuinness.

It should also be said that McGuinness’s overtures having been spurned,
it’s hard to see anyone else in the republican movement being able or
willing to take the same risks of symbolic gestures with bitter
unionists.

He’s a hard man to follow in more ways than one.

We have a favour to ask

We want to keep our publication as available as we can, so we need to ask for your help. Irish Republican News takes time, money and hard work to produce. But we do it because we believe it makes a difference.
If everyone who reads our website helps fund it, our future would be much more secure.

For as little as £1, you can support Irish Republican News – and it only takes a minute. Thank you.